A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 3, 2015
Sri Lanka's Violent Buddhists
Stop the extreme Bodu Bala Sena
BANGALORE, India — When I met Watareka Vijitha Thero in early 2014 in a suburb of Colombo, the Sri Lankan capital, he had been in hiding for nearly five months. The gentle-voiced monk had spoken out against anti-Muslim fearmongering by a hard-line group called the Buddhist Power Force, known by its Sinhalese initials B.B.S.
Now, with the country’s president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, facing a challenger in elections on Thursday, hard-line Buddhist groups have mobilized to support him. A wave of populist chauvinism has engulfed the country and sidelined the Tamil and Muslim minorities that make up over a quarter of the population. If it continues unchecked, Sri Lanka will face more instability, ethnic polarization and suppression of dissent.Three years ago, the B.B.S and other hard-line groups were fringe elements. Today, they are a powerful force, and their aggressive assertion of Sinhalese Buddhist dominance, in a country that is 70 percent Buddhist, is increasingly mirrored in government-approved revisionist histories of Sri Lanka.
More perniciously, a nostalgia for Buddhist supremacy is now widespread. Today, a revisionist version of history is celebrated in films, books, TV programs and state-run newspapers. In the Tamil-dominated north, and in the east, where most of the country’s Muslims live, national monuments have been erected to honor Buddhist kings. Government offices frequently announce “rediscoveries” of long-lost Buddhist temples and Buddha statues are placed in areas sacred to Muslims or Tamils. In the Kanniya hot springs in the east, a sign in Sinhalese and English explains that the site — considered among Tamils to be linked to a Hindu myth— had been part of an ancient Buddhist monastery. In Kuragala in the central hills, the culture ministry built a Buddhist stupa at a Sufi Muslim cave, declaring it an ancient monastery site. These claims aren’t based on new archeological findings; the Sri Lankan government is simply rewriting history with a more politically expedient narrative.By instruction or apathy, the police and army look away when hard-line monks incite riots, and fail to thoroughly investigate complaints. While the B.B.S. is not the sole voice of Sri Lankan Buddhists, its recourse to violence has increasingly forced secular liberals and pacifist Buddhists into silence.

by Say No to Hatred · 17,474 supporters

Say No to Hatred
Jan 2, 2015 — "No matter who wins in
January, the message is unmistakable: To be truly considered Sri Lankan
these days, one must accept the primacy and glory of the country’s
Sinhalese Buddhist past. Unless it is challenged, this mindset will pose
a far greater danger to Sri Lanka than the blows of hard-line thugs."
-Rohini Mohan-
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/03/opinion/sri-lankas-violent-buddhists.html?_r=0
-Rohini Mohan-
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/03/opinion/sri-lankas-violent-buddhists.html?_r=0
Sri Lanka’s Violent Buddhists
By ROHINI MOHAN
BANGALORE, India — When I met Watareka Vijitha Thero in early 2014 in a suburb of Colombo, the Sri Lankan capital, he had been in hiding for nearly five months. The gentle-voiced monk had spoken out against anti-Muslim fearmongering by a hard-line group called the Buddhist Power Force, known by its Sinhalese initials B.B.S.
Mr. Vijitha’s car was attacked in retaliation, and he narrowly escaped.
“What does it mean for Buddhism if those that speak for communal harmony
have to hide in fear?” he asked me. “What does it mean for my country
that the government lets these lawless thugs have a free run?”
Six months later, Mr. Vijitha was found on a road near Colombo stripped
naked and bloody, his hands and legs bound. The B.B.S. denied
involvement. When the monk filed a complaint, the police threw him in
jail for 12 days on charges of self- inflicted violence — a warning to
others who dared to criticize hard-line Buddhists.
Now, with the country’s president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, facing a challenger in elections on Thursday, hard-line Buddhist groups have mobilized to support him. A wave of populist chauvinism has engulfed the country and sidelined the Tamil and Muslim minorities that make up over a quarter of the population. If it continues unchecked, Sri Lanka will face more instability, ethnic polarization and suppression of dissent.Three years ago, the B.B.S and other hard-line groups were fringe elements. Today, they are a powerful force, and their aggressive assertion of Sinhalese Buddhist dominance, in a country that is 70 percent Buddhist, is increasingly mirrored in government-approved revisionist histories of Sri Lanka.
Extremist Buddhist monks are confounding; they directly contradict a
canonically nonviolent religion often perceived as apolitical. Like
radical monks in Thailand and Myanmar,
Sri Lankan hard-liners reserve special ire for Muslims. The B.B.S. and
its counterparts have incited mobs to demolish mosques. A June speech by
the B.B.S. chief Galagodaththe Gnanasara triggered anti-Muslim rioting in
Sri Lanka’s southern villages; thugs burned homes, four people were
killed and at least 80 were injured. But instead of arresting Mr.
Gnanasara, the president simply urged “all parties concerned to act in
restraint.”
In Sri Lanka, monks have long been involved in efforts to bolster
Buddhist primacy. In the 19th century, amid fears that European
colonizers and Christian missionaries were diluting Sri Lankan identity,
monks led a Buddhist revival, followed by a cultural movement for the
dominance of the Sinhalese language over English. These efforts produced
a Buddhist nationalism that persisted after independence in 1948
(Buddhism itself is accorded primacy in the Sri Lankan Constitution).
In the last decade, activism by Buddhist monks has grown more overtly
political. In 2004, they founded the National Heritage Party, known by
the initials J.H.U., and contested elections for the first time; nine
monks won parliamentary seats. Though it never espoused violence, the
J.H.U. supported the Sri Lanka Freedom Party of Mr. Rajapaksa. As the
government intensified its battle against the separatist Tamil Tigers,
the monks’ backing gave religious legitimacy to the state’s claim of
protecting the island for the Sinhalese Buddhist majority.
The defeat of the Tamil rebels in 2009 ended the country’s nearly
30-year-long civil war. The B.B.S. emerged during this postwar high,
deploying a selective reading of Sri Lanka’s origins — excluding the
contributions of indigenous and non-Sinhalese communities — to fan fears
of an existential threat to Buddhism and justify its acts of violence.
At a rally in 2012, the B.B.S. leader Mr. Gnanasara likened the Sri
Lankan military’s victory to the ancient conquest of a Tamil chief by a
beloved Sinhalese king. The spectators knew the story and cheered at the
comparison. “Tamils have been taught a lesson twice,” he said; so would
other minorities if they tried to “challenge Sri Lankan culture.”
In the past two years, hard-line groups have consolidated their
political power. The B.B.S. has even used the state-owned cellular
network to raise funds. Sri Lanka’s defense secretary, Gotabaya
Rajapaksa, the president’s brother, has attended some of their events.
The government, meanwhile, denies any links to them.
More perniciously, a nostalgia for Buddhist supremacy is now widespread. Today, a revisionist version of history is celebrated in films, books, TV programs and state-run newspapers. In the Tamil-dominated north, and in the east, where most of the country’s Muslims live, national monuments have been erected to honor Buddhist kings. Government offices frequently announce “rediscoveries” of long-lost Buddhist temples and Buddha statues are placed in areas sacred to Muslims or Tamils. In the Kanniya hot springs in the east, a sign in Sinhalese and English explains that the site — considered among Tamils to be linked to a Hindu myth— had been part of an ancient Buddhist monastery. In Kuragala in the central hills, the culture ministry built a Buddhist stupa at a Sufi Muslim cave, declaring it an ancient monastery site. These claims aren’t based on new archeological findings; the Sri Lankan government is simply rewriting history with a more politically expedient narrative.By instruction or apathy, the police and army look away when hard-line monks incite riots, and fail to thoroughly investigate complaints. While the B.B.S. is not the sole voice of Sri Lankan Buddhists, its recourse to violence has increasingly forced secular liberals and pacifist Buddhists into silence.
In November, Mr. Rajapaksa’s health minister, Maithripala Sirisena,unexpectedly defected and
announced his candidacy for president. The B.B.S. denounced him as a
Western stooge and gave its support to Mr. Rajapaksa, but the J.H.U. has
said it will oppose Mr. Rajapaksa’s undemocratic ways by backing his
opponent.
Mr. Sirisena is likely aware that he must play up his Buddhist
allegiances if he hopes to defeat Mr. Rajapaksa — a strategy that will
only strengthen chauvinist groups. He has sworn to preserve Buddhism’s
constitutional prominence, and rejected Tamil demands for greater
autonomy. With little choice, Tamil and Muslim parties now back Mr.
Sirisena.
No matter who wins in January, the message is unmistakable: To be truly
considered Sri Lankan these days, one must accept the primacy and glory
of the country’s Sinhalese Buddhist past. Unless it is challenged, this
mindset will pose a far greater danger to Sri Lanka than the blows of
hard-line thugs.
Rohini Mohan is the author of “The Seasons of Trouble: Life Amid the Ruins of Sri Lanka’s Civil War.”